New research is untangling the complex relationship between symptoms of depression and losses in memory and thinking that often emerge together with Alzheimer’s disease.
In fact, the new data suggests that “depression symptoms themselves may be among the early changes in the preclinical stages of dementia syndromes,” explained study lead author Dr. Jennifer Gatchel, who works in the division of geriatric psychiatry at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston.

However, the analysis revealed a significant link between worsening depression symptoms and mental decline over two to seven years, and both of these trends seemed to be linked to a buildup of amyloid protein in brain tissue.
The slow accumulation of amyloid has long been known as a hallmark of Alzheimer’s disease.
“Our research found that even modest levels of brain amyloid deposition can impact the relationship between depression symptoms and cognitive [thinking] abilities,” Gatchel said in a hospital news release.
This new insight that depression symptoms might be part of the Alzheimer’s process could further research into the prevention or treatment of the illness, she added.

The researchers stressed that not all older adults with depression and amyloid buildup will experience declines in memory and thinking, however. That suggests that other factors — for example, brain metabolism, or the volume of the brain’s memory center, the hippocampus — could link depression and mental decline.
Other mechanisms — including brain degeneration caused by the protein tau (another protein long associated with Alzheimer’s), high blood pressure and inflammation — might play a role and need to be investigated as well.
Overall, the findings suggest that depression could have multiple causes and might also “work synergistically with amyloid and related processes to affect cognition over time in older adults,” Gatchel said.
Two experts in brain health agreed that the study could further dementia research and treatment.

“Whereas in the past, depression and dementia were viewed as separate conditions that could co-occur in the same individual, we have learned now that mood and cognitive symptoms may actually be symptoms of the same underlying condition with shared pathology,” LeMonda explained.
Dr. Gayatri Devi is a neurologist and psychiatrist who specializes in memory disorders at Northwell Health in New York City. She said that “depression has long been known to be a risk factor for Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias, but one question that clinicians contend with is whether depression is a symptom of cognitive loss or whether it is the cognitive impairment that leads to depression.”
The new research gets closer to solving that puzzle, Devi said, “and underscores that not only is it important to treat late-life depression, physicians should also be alert to, and evaluate for, cognitive loss in such persons and address that separately, as well.”
The new research was published online Aug. 9 in JAMA Network Open.
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Robert Preidt is a reporter for HealthDay. Copyright © 2019 HealthDay. All rights reserved.